THE NEW YORKER 105 - COIVS Once Grazed on Butter...i'" Channel t That was before the days of yeast cakes. Before, in fact, a vast extension of wharves on both sides of the river changed the force and course of the cur- rents which eventually cut the channel. Now you may sail right down under Brooklyn Bridge and through the channel into Tebo for repairs... while the little wife does her shopping in Manhattan. For 31 years Tebo facilities and organization have grown and ex- panded with the needs and impor- tance of New York Harbor for the building, repair, recondition- ing and fitting-ou t of fine yachts. Ample storage (wet or dry) for all sizes of yachts and fittings. TEl YACHT BASIN; I 1 " TC\ n: O ' ; Ia.:-,. ... ",.4. 1 .1) 1,.. f L: .I '. ,." TODD DRY DOCK ENGINEERING AND REPAIR CORPORATION Foot of 23rd Street, Brooklyn, New York '::':â}0 Òl :};. .. .. ::.::r :....:.. .. ,',:;;;;{ / .: .: ;S.:.. l i ! · . . , ".' ,.,;;:'::':: ..... ....... ," Try a DYKAREE Reu. U. B. Pa.t. Off. Bacardi Flavour Hayana'$ Famou$ Cocktail 1 part Dykaree, 3 parts Holloway's London Dry, add juice 1 lime or % lemon, shake with cracked ice. HOLLOWAY'S LONDON DRY IMPORTED FROM LONDON A t all good grocers FREE Cocktail Recipes Send us your name and address and we will mail to you 28 delicious recipes for cocktails, punches, and aperitifs. Ask for booklet N. Sole Importers B. B. DORF & CO. 350 W. 31st St. New York Beware of injurious essences or extracts since Notre Dame started the fashiQn C a few years ago. Dobie made four substitutions last week to Penn's seven- h one" s teen. S MALLER squads won't be a fash- ion till the Rules Committee sees fit to make a move in this direction, but one thing you are sure to notice next year will be the increased importance of the kickoff as an offensive play for the receivingside. Y ale'splay, which worked for touchdowns against Dartmouth, Army, and Princeton, will be part- ly responsible. In it, the interference makes a flying wedge for the receiver, who runs up the middle of the field instead of cutting to the sidelines, thus outdistancing both flanks of the opposi- tion and overpowering the weaker mid- dle. At Cambridge, of course, it was Harvard's kickoff stunt which took everyone by surprise. Theirs was not a new trick by any means-Army did r almost exactly the same thing against Stanford a season or two ago, with Cagle taking the lateral-but it hap- ': pened so abruptly that it functioned aI- ;: most to perfection. The advantages D of a tricky kickoff play are obvious $. ':i enough; the circumstances surround- J gh :d:l ;: : : : i i:: I merit of happening at a time when the other team was under the impression that the game was just about to be- gIn. Harvard's other trick-the quick kick, with Crickard holding the ball for Wood-was clever and useful, but it was also a symptom of the over- anxiety to get the last possible yard of distance which characterized Wood's kicking game. Wood's punt in the last quarter-the one which Jack Wilbur blocked and recovered for Yale, just before Booth scored his historic and de- cisive three points-showed the same thing. Wood, still actuated by a penny- wise insistence on saving space, stood closer to his line than usual, closer than was necessary, and closer, as it later proved, than Was wise. -R. L. T. . ALIBI ((Breathes there the man With soul so dead Who never to himself Hath said: 'Of all the human beings That live !' m doubtless The most sensitive! ' " -RUTH LAMBERT JONES New . '<:"?' i.i f J' I } ZIG ZAG SWEATER { ""'II!'!w.' ...: ;:- - :. * :.t ':Im ." "." ." . :.::: . ". . 1(" , ' .. ...,. .. - . .,.... , i,;:/ i$@:' Xi ": 1d ï t .:::;:; /..,.....é. . ..>, A':/' " ' . 1 " ".,< '. ;l / . . . . '" .. . . . '... .... . ,": .. -:'.. ..... . ' - tZSk\ j ':f " \ \,\..\ ".,.J\f ::: !:r;'\ / } ,.,.,.. ,'M.'" .(;; ,. . . .. i/ :; - (fi :.)J. f;' S: ':. 4 r "," .. . .::Ji.. Wi'" . " >>., :: d r }í' \ "\ \ .. $4.96 S TRI PED SLIP-ON lONG or short sleeves are L optional. The long ones, of course, have chic puffs above the elbow, the short ones are plain. Effective combinations of green and brown, or red and blue. Sizes 34 to 40. SWEATER DEPARTMENT THIRD flOOR MACY'S 34th Street and Broadway, New York "-:<' "."'t , if' f . " " : .;, ',. .,' ':.::',.' .,/';.; ::.. '....>>':.'.<,j.. ...::.f:':l . .....;;::: ..' -..::.' é